Fediversity/matrix/coturn/README.md

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# TURN server
You need an TURN server to connect participants that are behind a NAT firewall.
Because IPv6 doesn't really need TURN, and Chrome can get confused if it has
to use TURN over IPv6, we'll stick to a strict IPv4-only configuration.
Also, because VoIP traffic is only UDP, we won't do TCP.
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IMPORTANT! TURN can also be offered by [LiveKit](../element-call#livekit), in
which case you should probably not run coturn (unless you don't use LiveKit's
built-in TURN server, or want to run both to support legacy calls too).
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# Installation
Installation is short:
```
apt install coturn
```
For sake of maintainability we'll move the only configuration file into its
own directoy:
```
mkdir /etc/coturn
mv /etc/turnserver.conf /etc/coturn
```
We need to tell systemd to start it with the configuration file on the new
place. Edit the service file with:
```
systemctl edit coturn
```
Contrary to what the comment suggests, only the parts you add will override
the content that's already there. We have to "clean" the `ExecStart` first,
before we assign a new line to it, so this is the bit we add:
```
[Service]
ExecStart=
ExecStart=/usr/bin/turnserver -c /etc/coturn/turnserver.conf --pidfile=/etc/coturn/run/turnserver.pid
```
Create the directory `/etc/coturn/run` and chgrp it to `turnserver`, so that
coturn can write its pid there: `/run/turnserver.pid` can't be written because
coturn doesn't run as root.
This prepares us for the next step: configuring the whole thing.
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# DNS and certificate {#dnscert}
As stated before, we only use IPv4, so a CNAME to our machine that also does
IPv6 is a bad idea. Fix a new entry in DNS for TURN only, we'll use
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`turn.example.com` here.
Make sure this entry only has an A record, no AAAA.
Get a certificate for this name:
```
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certbot certonly --nginx -d turn.example.com
```
This assumes you've already setup and started nginx (see [nginx](../nginx)).
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The certificate files reside under `/etc/letsencrypt/live`, but coturn doesn't
run as root, and can't read them. Therefore we create the directory
`/etc/coturn/ssl` where we copy the files to. This script should be run after
each certificate renewal:
```
#!/bin/bash
# This script is hooked after a renewal of the certificate, so
# that it's copied and chowned and made readable by coturn:
cd /etc/coturn/ssl
cp /etc/letsencrypt/live/turn.example.com/{fullchain,privkey}.pem .
chown turnserver:turnserver *.pem
# We should restart either coturn or LiveKit, they cannot run both!
systemctl restart coturn
#systemctl restart livekit-server
```
Run this automatically after every renewal by adding this line to
`/etc/letsencrypt/renewal/turn.example.com.conf`:
```
renew_hook = /etc/coturn/fixssl
```
Yes, it's a bit primitive and could (should?) be polished. But for now: it
works.
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# Configuration {#configuration}
Synapse's documentation gives a reasonable [default
config](https://element-hq.github.io/synapse/latest/setup/turn/coturn.html).
We'll need a shared secret that Synapse can use to control coturn, so let's
create that first:
```
pwgen -s 64 1
```
Now that we have this, we can configure our configuration file under
`/etc/coturn/turnserver.conf`.
```
# We don't need more than 10000 connections:
min-port=50000
max-port=60000
use-auth-secret
static-auth-secret=<previously created secret>
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realm=turn.example.com
user-quota=12
total-quota=1200
# Of course: substitute correct IPv4 address:
listening-ip=185.206.232.60
# VoIP traffic is only UDP
no-tcp-relay
# coturn doesn't run as root, so the certificate has
# to be copied/chowned here.
cert=/etc/coturn/ssl/fullchain.pem
pkey=/etc/coturn/ssl/privkey.pem
denied-peer-ip=0.0.0.0-255.255.255.255
denied-peer-ip=127.0.0.0-0.255.255.255
denied-peer-ip=10.0.0.0-10.255.255.255
denied-peer-ip=172.16.0.0-172.31.255.255
denied-peer-ip=192.168.0.0-192.168.255.255
denied-peer-ip=100.64.0.0-100.127.255.255
denied-peer-ip=192.0.0.0-192.0.0.255
denied-peer-ip=169.254.0.0-169.254.255.255
denied-peer-ip=192.88.99.0-192.88.99.255
denied-peer-ip=198.18.0.0-198.19.255.255
denied-peer-ip=192.0.2.0-192.0.2.255
denied-peer-ip=198.51.100.0-198.51.100.255
denied-peer-ip=203.0.113.0-203.0.113.255
# We do only IPv4
allocation-default-address-family="ipv4"
# No weak TLS
no-tlsv1
no-tlsv1_1
```
All other options in the configuration file are either commented out, or
defaults.
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Make sure you've opened the correct ports in the [firewall](../firewall).